State v. DeFreitas

426 A.2d 799, 179 Conn. 431, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 8, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 426 A.2d 799 (State v. DeFreitas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. DeFreitas, 426 A.2d 799, 179 Conn. 431, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 683 (Colo. 1980).

Opinion

Cotter, C. J.

The bodies of a man and a woman buried in a shallow grave in a wooded area behind an A-frame house on Shewville Road in Ledyard, Connecticut were recovered by the Connecticut state police on May 30, 1974, acting on information supplied by Joanne Rainello, formerly the defendant’s common-law wife. At an autopsy it was determined that the man had died from gunshot wounds of the head and chest and that the woman had died from a gunshot wound of her head and brain.

A grand jury, on November 12, 1974, found a true bill of indictment charging the defendant with two counts of murder in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53-9 (now § 53a-54a). Thereafter, a petit jury of twelve returned a verdict of guilty on both counts of the indictment as to the defendant Richard DePreitas and his codefendant Donald Brant, now deceased. The defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict was denied, judgment was entered, and the defendant has appealed.

*433 I

The defendant has essentially raised two claims of error on appeal. To understand fully the nature of these claims and their factual as well as legal underpinnings, it is necessary first to delineate the facts that the jury might reasonably have found from the evidence introduced at trial which serve to implicate the defendant with the murdered persons unearthed by the state police.

The dead male body discovered in the shallow grave on May 30, 1974, was identified subsequently by dental records as Gustavous Lee Carmichael; the identity of the female body was never established. On October 5, 1970, Carmichael and another man escaped from a deputy United States marshal while being transported from a Massachusetts state prison to federal court in Hartford to be sentenced for charges then pending against them. Carmichael and the other man robbed a New Jersey bank on December 22, 1970 of approximately $60,000. Carmichael and a woman companion (the other murder victim) six days later on December 28, 1970, appeared at the A-frame Ledyard home of the defendant DeFreitas and his common-law wife Joanne, who were living there under the names of Bay and Joanne Emerson.

On that date the defendant, DeFreitas, returned to his Ledyard home after having committed a bank robbery in Newport, Bhode Island where he had stolen approximately $30,000. By his own admission DeFreitas was a professional thief and robber.

Among the defendant’s criminal associates were the other defendant, Donald Brant, now deceased, and James Gardner, who, along with Joanne *434 Rainello, offered the crucial testimony linking the defendants DeFreitas and Brant to the murder of Carmichael and his companion. Both Brant and Gardner were at DeFreitas’ home on the evening of December 28, 1970 and in the presence of Carmichael and his woman companion, DeFreitas divided the $30,000 spoils from his robbery with Brant and Gardner. DeFreitas stated that the three were partners and should take care of each other. When one of the three would commit a robbery, they would share the proceeds; the trio possessed a number of weapons in their arsenal; and maintained some apartments around Providence where they would harbor criminals.

Carmichael and his companion came to Ledyard on the run from the police and were seeking a place to hide out. They stayed two nights at the DeFreitas home and DeFreitas provided them with false identity papers in the names of Dirk and Lorraine Stahl who had once been residents of the same inn as the defendant. He had appropriated some of their identification documents. Carmichael’s woman companion opened a checking account under the name of Lorraine Stahl and on December 30,1970, the couple moved to a home they had rented in Noank under the name of Stahl.

During the time that Carmichael’s female companion, who was now using the name Lorraine Stahl, was at DeFreitas’ Ledyard home, she expressed fears to Joanne Rainello about the life she was leading, and told her that she was nervous about using fictitious names and was afraid of being caught by the police and what she might say if she were apprehended. Rainello relayed this information to DeFreitas soon after it was told to her.

*435 At this point the defendant summoned Donald Brant from his home in Rhode Island to discuss the threat that Carmichael’s companion posed. DePreitas and Brant decided to kill both Gustavous Carmichael and his unidentified female companion because DePreitas and Brant concluded they had too much at stake and that, in light of Carmichael’s feelings for his girlfriend, they could not kill her without killing him as well. After making plans to carry out the murders with Brant, DePreitas lured the victims back to his A-frame house on Shewville Road in Ledyard on December 31, 1970. The defendant shot Carmichael repeatedly and killed him; then Brant shot and killed the woman. Both the defendant and Brant described to Joanne Rainello and James Gardner how the shootings had taken place. Rainello had been out of the house at the time of the murders and was picked up by DePreitas shortly after the shootings; Gardner had been called by DePreitas to come to the Ledyard house because of a “problem.” When he arrived at the A-frame house, Gardner was told for the first time that DePreitas and Brant had murdered Carmichael and his female companion. The reason given to Gardner for the murders was that DePreitas and Brant feared that Carmichael’s female companion, to save herself, would, if Carmichael were caught by the police, reveal everything she knew about those who had helped Carmichael. Gardner then assisted DePreitas and Brant with the burial of the bodies.

II

The first claim raised by the defendant in his appeal is that the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of three witnesses who were called by *436 the defense to testify about alleged third party declarations against penal interest. The defendant contends that these declarations were inconsistent with the guilt of the defendant and thus their exclusion deprived him of his due process right to a fair trial in violation of the fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution.

The three witnesses called by the defense purportedly were to testify as to five declarations concerning the murders in question in the present case which were allegedly made by the following third party declarants: James Gardner and Joanne Rainello, both of whom had earlier in the trial been called to testify by the prosecution and who were testifying under a grant of immunity by the state, and one John Robichaud, who had died prior to the trial.

The first of these witnesses, Thomas A. Greene, called by the defense testified that he was then serving a sentence for robbery and in the previous fifteen to twenty years he had had many felony convictions. He also testified that he had known James Gardner for about fourteen years and Gardner was the best man at his wedding on December 7, 1970. When Greene started to testify about a conversation he had with Gardner two and one half weeks after the wedding, the state’s attorney objected.

In the absence of the jury the defendant’s trial counsel made an offer of proof as to the content of two conversations between Gardner and Greene.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
426 A.2d 799, 179 Conn. 431, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-defreitas-conn-1980.